Apple’s oldest artifacts have become some of the most coveted technological relics in the world, but the company’s two remaining co-founders haven’t reached a consensus on whether or not they’re surprised by the rabid attention surrounding each and every auction that springs up.

If Steve Wozniak could say anything to his Apple Computer co-founder, the late Steve Jobs, what would it be?

That was the most poignant question Wozniak received Thursday during a Q&A session at Fairleigh Dickinson University's Teaneck/Hackensack campus. Students - who were about the same age as Wozniak and Jobs were when they founded the personal computer company - also asked for advice in achieving the kind of lightning-bolt success that the Steves had with Apple. (The short answer: it's not easy.)

The latest bid to simplify data storage comes from a team that includes Steve Wozniak, a guy who knows a thing or two about making technology easier.

The co-founder of Apple has joined former colleagues from flash storage maker Fusion-io at Primary Data, a Silicon Valley startup that says it can put all of an organization's storage capacity in a single virtual pool. The enterprise can keep the gear it already has and even take advantage of public cloud storage, while leaving it up to Primary Data's software to allocate the right resources to each application, the company says.

Our exclusive interview with Steve Wozniak continues as tech reporter Morgan Moore speaks with the Apple co-founder about creating the Fortune 500 company, and what he hopes the future holds for the tech world.

If Steve Jobs was the public face of Apple, then Steve Wozniak—the inventor of the first personal computer and co-founder of what would become one of the world's most popular companies—was surely the soul of the company.

The Apple II may be one of the most important systems in the history of personal computing — but that doesn’t mean it was perfect. Nearly 40 years later, Steve Wozniak is still coming up with ways he could have done it better. The detail comes from a bit of communication between Woz and a deeply devoted Apple I reproduction expert, Mike W.

One of the few remaining examples of Apple Inc.'s first pre-assembled computer, Apple-1, has sold for a record $905,000 at an auction in New York. The Apple-1 was described as “in superb overall condition,” with no apparent modifications to the motherboard. Included were a vintage keyboard with pre-7400 series military spec chips, a vintage Sanyo monitor and a custom vintage power supply in wooden box, as well as two vintage tape-decks and a video recording of Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak’s keynote speech at the 1980 “Applevention.”

The original Apple computer model was put together by the tech company's founders, the late Steve Jobs and partner Steve Wozniak, and will go under the hammer later this week. Experts estimate it could reach a price over over $500,000 (£300,000).

Woz Turns 60!
August 11, 2010
On Steve's birthday, Woz' wife Janet arranged to have a video created as a present for him. You can watch it on You tube now:WATCH

Woz Category on Jeopardy!
Wow, I guess anything is possible.
How many answers would YOU get right?Check it out.

Another worthy cause to consider. From Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales. "Wikipedia is something special. It is like a library or a public park. It is like a temple for the mind. It is a place we can all go to think, to learn, to share our knowledge with others".Donate